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Farnborough, Hants

Pete Carr worked out of a discreet industrial unit in Farnborough. The board listing the companies at the end of the road was full of electronic and aviation small businesses. But there was a blank next to Unit 46.

Max knocked and waited. A square of glass set in the door looked on to a narrow staircase. The place appeared to be empty. After a couple of minutes, a pair of feet descended the stairs. The door was unlocked and opened.

‘Carr?’ said Max.

‘Pete, please. Sorry about the delay,’ Carr said jovially. ‘Only me here this morning. Stuck on the phone. The boys are working on a tricky one. Someone’s nanny’s been a bit naughty. They’re out wiring up the kids’ schoolbags.’

Pete Carr didn’t mind what sort of business he took on as long as it paid. He sailed close to the wind. Broke the law, provided the client made it worth his while. Sometimes it was surprising who was prepared to sub-contract out illegal jobs. Governments, lawyers, even the police.

Max smiled. He liked him immediately. Carr was someone who clearly loved his job.

‘Come on through, mate. Coffee? Tea?’

‘Tea would be great, Pete. Thanks.’

Max followed him through to the back room. Got him talking.

‘Had a close shave yesterday,’ said Pete as he made the tea. ‘I was bugging a finance director’s computer – commissioned by his CEO. Wasn’t sure what he was up to. Anyway, bugger me, the bloke walks into his office as I’m halfway through the job.’

‘Trouble?’

‘Nah. Told him I was working on the IT system. So you’re one of Tryon’s spooks?’

‘Tryon? Never heard of him.’

‘Very good.’ Pete laughed. ‘I’ll tell him you said that.’

Max looked around the workshop. It was in stark contrast to the empty appearance of the front of the unit. The place was heaving with stuff.

‘How much is this kit worth?’

Pete did a comedy blow through his teeth.

‘Probably cost you four hundred grand at today’s prices. I’ve added to it as I’ve gone from task to task. Reason I get so many jobs is because I have everything here.’ Pete pointed around the room. ‘Bugging stuff, scanning gear, jammers, mikes, cameras … This jammer’s worth a few quid,’ he said, picking up a small box.

‘What would you use that for?’

‘I take it on the train. When some twat starts wah-wah-wah-ing it, I jam his phone.’ Pete grinned. ‘Doing loads of cars at the moment. The thieves have worked out where the manufacturers put the tracking devices, so they have them off and ship the cars over to Qatar before you can blink. They won’t find ours though. Only trouble is, most of the time it takes two trips. Nobody’s making bumpers out of metal these days, so we have to go round the night before and glue a metal plate inside the bumper. Then we fix the tracking device the next day with magnets. You see, the tracker has got to be able to see the sky.’

Pete would have chatted all day. He liked people. But he could see Max was ticking. ‘What can I do you for then, mate?’

‘How small a tracker have you got, Pete?’

‘What for? A human?’

‘A painting.’

‘A painting. Hmm. That isn’t so easy.’

‘And it needs to be hidden.’

‘Frame?’

‘No,’ Max said, shaking his head. ‘We don’t have access to the frame. Only the canvas and the wooden stretcher.’

‘You might be in luck. Got the very latest miniature tracker in, a couple of weeks back.’ Pete delved into a drawer, pulled out a few cardboard boxes and then held up something the size of a very thin box of matches.

‘How about this?’

Max nodded. He was pretty confident they’d be able to hide it.

‘That should be okay.’

‘Power, though. That’s the problem with trackers. They need power. How often do you need to contact it?’

‘What do you mean?’

‘Well, if you want a constant signal, the battery will run out very quickly. But if we programme it to give off a signal, say, once every five minutes, the battery will last much longer.’

‘Once every hour is more than enough.’

‘How about geo-fencing it?’

‘What?’

‘I can get it to tell you when it’s leaving a certain location.’

Max thought about that, but it sounded too complicated. ‘Once an hour, Pete, that’s all I need.’

‘Okay. We can turn it off, anyway. Which is not a bad idea. It saves the battery and makes it harder to detect. We’ll follow the tracker on the Internet. Through a server based in France. Don’t worry, it will have its own account. No one else can see the information.’

‘Can you follow it for me?’

‘Sure. No problem.’

Nothing was a problem for Pete. Drilling into hotel bedroom walls to place listening probes, installing keyboard loggers into computers, or scanning rooms for listening devices. It all came easy to Pete, as long as he was paid.

Eton

It felt weird, driving under the archway into College Yard. The place hadn’t changed much since it was built in the 1400s. Max appreciated it more now than he had done when he’d walked there every day for the best part of four years.

He pictured himself rushing under the arch in his tails and scholar’s cape. Terrified of being late for a lesson and placed on Tardy Book. Max Ward: one small insignificant dot in Eton’s history. A sometime scholar who’d completely wasted the opportunity to really make something of himself.

He looked at the immaculate lawn – showing the effects of winter now, but he remembered how regimentally striped it always was in the summer. Boys, of course, weren’t allowed to walk on it. He was tempted to saunter across it and see if anyone shouted at him.

You can leave Eton, Max mused, but Eton never leaves you: the ethos, the discipline, the respect, the fear of failure – even when you know you’ve already failed. Ten years on, and he still woke up with issues swirling around his head.

It was the physical aspects of school that he treasured. The smell of the cloisters outside the head master’s study. The organ bellowing out bass tones that reverberated through your ribcage. The vast expanse of playing fields sloping down to the Thames. The rowers thrashing up the river. And the mud being ground into your face while you played the Wall Game.

Strange, Max thought, that the situation he was now in was so closely linked to Eton. If it hadn’t been for the school, he wouldn’t have joined the Office. He wouldn’t have been sent to Saudi – and later to Moscow. And he wouldn’t be in The Hague now.

Pallesson cast a shadow over everything, but the endgame was fast approaching and only one of them was going to come out of this in one piece.

Max checked his watch. He was quarter of an hour early, and he knew that if anything annoyed M. J. Keate more than a boy being late, it was a boy that was early.

Max wondered if the other beaks at Eton realised what a dark horse Keate was. On the surface, a slightly bumbling tutor. But underneath, a covert, active spy. Max knew that Keate was always economical as to the extent of his work with Tryon. But he assumed it was more than he let on.

He walked round the corner, past the school office into the cloister below Upper School. To a passing tourist, the noticeboards stuck on the stone pillars were random information. To Max, the team sheets posted on them had meant the difference between exhilaration and utter depression. He remembered the day he’d walked up to see who else had been picked to play in the first eleven football team, assuming that he was a certainty. But his name hadn’t been on the sheet. Max felt sick even thinking about it now. He walked on through School Yard, past the Founder’s statue into the inner cloister. The last time he’d been here was when he was expelled.

In four years, he’d never taken in the spirit and tranquillity of this quadrangle. Jutting out from the walls were memorials to fallen Old Boys in both wars, dedicated by their mothers and sisters.

For Valour, one large slab of marble read. King Edward VII was quoted: In their lives … they maintained the traditions that have made Eton renowned.

The last Old Etonian, of many, to be awarded the VC caught Max’s eye.

1982 VC Lt Col H Jones Parachute Regiment

‘Colonel H – Falkland Islands,’ Max said out loud. He could remember being captivated by this charismatic soldier who led from the front and died in front of his men. Then he realized that time was running away from him and he was going to be late.

The gate at the foot of Keate’s garden path still made a nasty squeak. Max remembered suggesting that a bit of oil would do the trick. ‘It’s the noisy gate that gets the oil,’ Keate had chuckled to himself. ‘But still, don’t you dare. How else am I to know when someone’s coming?’

As Max walked up the path he knew Keate would be watching from the big Georgian study window. He didn’t look up though. If he waved, his old tutor wouldn’t wave back. And then he’d feel like a small, insecure boy. Or that was how he’d always felt in the past – at least, until he’d learnt not to look up.

Max knew the door wouldn’t be locked. It never was. He pushed it open and walked into the familiar hallway, which was clad with oak panels. How often had he stood in here, waiting for Keate to finish tutoring other boys? A hundred times probably, but only one day really stuck in his memory.

He remembered being taken aback when Keate had apologized for keeping him waiting. It was so out of character; the old boy never did that. And there’d been a sudden awkwardness about him.

‘It’s about your father, Ward,’ Keate had mumbled. ‘Not good news, I’m afraid.’ Then Keate had paused, as if he couldn’t get the words out. The delay only lasted for a second, but it felt to Max like an eternity. He remembered being frozen to his chair. Paralysed by whatever it was that Keate couldn’t say. ‘I’m afraid he’s dead. Terrible shock. Dreadful.’

Max hadn’t taken much else in at the time. Keate had spared him the details.

Trying to shake off the memory, he paused to look at the frieze on the wall opposite Keate’s study. He hadn’t seen it before.

‘Interesting, isn’t it?’ Keate said over his shoulder. ‘Some jacques took the oak panelling down to get at the pipes and found it underneath. Dates back to the sixteen hundreds. English Heritage went mad – told us we can’t smoke near it. Come on in.’

Max followed his tutor into a large, bright study.

‘Help yourself, old lad,’ Keate said breezily, as if they’d already talked at length that day. Max was used to his dismissive familiarity. He’d always been like that. Never one to make a fuss about a departure or a return. Even if they were divided by years. It was probably his way of dealing with being so close to his protégés one minute, and seeing them gone the next.

Keate beckoned towards his drinks cupboard in the corner of the room. For the first time, Max really took in the magnificence of the piece. The arched scallop frieze, the carved shell and Vitruvian scroll, the big heavy doors.

‘Beautiful cupboard, Keate,’ he remarked.

‘What’s the matter with you? Been there for years. My aunt Mary gave it to me, bless her. George II. Mahogany. Hopefully she’ll leave me her flat in Sloane Avenue, too. Cranmer Court. Rather nice block. Amazing old girl. Still does The Times crossword every day and rants about split infinitives. But there you go. I’m rambling. Are you in love? Old boys always come and see me when they’re in love. God knows why.’

Max wasn’t really listening to him. He stood with his back to Keate, studying the painting hanging behind the desk. The old man had always been blasé about it, as if embarrassed that he knew so much about the Flemish and Dutch masters. This ‘very poor example’ of Jan Asselijn’s work, he would say dismissively, was all he could afford.

But like all the great tutors, Keate had instilled his pupils with an everlasting interest in the subject that was his passion. Max remembered him taking a few of them to Windsor Castle to study Hendrick Avercamp’s paintings. Pallesson had been forensically attentive and ingratiatingly unctuous on that visit. As ever, he had to appear the most interested and enlightened.

‘Well, I might be,’ Max mumbled. ‘But that isn’t why I’ve come to see you.’

Max still had his back to Keate while he poured himself a weak glass of Islay whisky and water. It was at Eton that he’d been introduced to the peaty taste, drinking with a boy in his house whose father owned one of the distilleries on the island.

Keate watched him, remembering the boy he had once been. When his father’s accountants sifted through the wreckage after his death, they had found the coffers were empty. Keate, loath to see natural talent go to waste, had been prepared to make up the shortfall. But Max got himself kicked out. Keate had felt disappointed rather than let down. Nevertheless it had created a hiatus in their relationship.

Max sat down and faced his old tutor as he fiddled with some papers on his cluttered desk.

‘Why did the Office take me on, Keate?’

Keate took his glasses off and looked up at Max. ‘Why? Probably because no one else would have had you. You weren’t exactly flavour of the month on your departure from this establishment.’

‘That isn’t an answer, and you know it,’ Max replied impassively.

Keate couldn’t follow his drift. Why the sudden desire to go over old ground? He assumed his former student wasn’t looking for affirmation that he was a brilliant linguist – the best he had ever come across – or that he possessed an equally remarkable talent for lateral thought. Those were the skills he had used to sell Max Ward to Tryon, and they were hardly a secret.

But those weren’t the talents that had made him beseech Tryon to take Max on. Keate had an almost religious belief in the Instructions of Amenemopa, the great Egyptian leader. And in all his years he had never come across a boy in whom he had such faith to promote Maat – a world of truth and order. In Max, Keate saw the silent man: calm and self-effacing, knowledgeable, thoughtful and temperate. He saw someone who could make a difference.

The great irony – although Keate often wondered if it hadn’t been more than a coincidence – was that an incarnation of Isfet had come along at exactly the same time. Isfet being the tendency of men towards evil, injustice, discord and chaos. Pallesson, Keate had come to realize, was one of its princes.

‘What’s this all about, Max?’

‘Can I trust Tryon?’ Max asked bluntly, feeling no need to qualify his question.

Keate stood up from behind his desk and wandered towards a table crammed with lead toy soldiers. Their red-and-blue Napoleonic tunics were intricately painted. He picked one up, studied it carefully, then put it down again.

‘Can you trust Tryon?’ Keate repeated. ‘Well, I suppose that depends on whether you can trust me. And that in turn depends on whether you are helping or hindering.’ He paused to fiddle with his glasses and reflect. ‘I asked Tryon to see you were hired because I knew you had a talent that would be of use. A rare talent, if channelled in the right direction. More importantly, I felt that the Office would force you to develop the one thing you lacked: patience.’

Keate paused again and looked out of the window. Max followed his gaze. A couple of boys meandered out of the college entrance bouncing a football between them. Max recognized their long, woollen socks. The association football colours. For a second he felt jealous. Jealous of the expectation that he’d always felt before any game.

‘You were different. You were also a risk. I asked them to take you much younger than they normally would have done. I told Tryon you might fall between the cracks if they waited. That was why they parked you in Oman. To see if you would learn. I couldn’t explain that at the time; it would have upset the delicate flow of the process. But obviously they were pleased, otherwise you wouldn’t have been moved to Moscow.’

Max still said nothing. He’d come to listen. He took a long sip of his Scotch and water.

‘In your game, life is rarely simple. To fight for good, sometimes you have to collaborate with undesirable people to get the end result. Although I don’t know any details, there may be times when you won’t understand the big picture. But what you must have is faith. You should have faith in Tryon, Max. Make friends with the just and righteous man whose actions you have observed. Remember Ani, Max?’

Max nodded and put his glass on the small table next to his right arm. ‘Well, Keate, I hope you’re right,’ he said hesitantly.

The dining room was small, compared to the generous space of Keate’s study. The housekeeper had cooked them a fish pie, peas and cabbage. Neither of them said anything until they’d helped themselves and sat down. Max was the first to speak.

‘Wherever I go, I run into Pallesson. He arrived in Moscow, quite the little star from Cambridge. And he was very successful. Too successful. Did you recommend Pallesson as well?’

Keate finished his mouthful of fish pie. ‘It’s a complicated system. It’s not as simple as that.’

‘Bollocks. Did you underwrite him or not?’

Keate carried on eating his lunch. Max said nothing. He wanted an answer. For nearly five minutes neither of them said a word. Keate finished his fish pie, then ate the last pea on his plate. Finally he put down his knife and fork and gave Max a long look. Max didn’t meet his eye.

‘I was compromised,’ Keate said.

‘What do you mean, you were compromised? Compromised by whom? How?’

Keate really didn’t want to answer. He had never discussed the matter with anyone, had never intended to. He subtly shifted the conversation back on to Max. ‘Is it wise to be in conflict with Pallesson? You know how dangerous, how destructive he is. Keep your distance from those with hate in their hearts.’

‘Ankh-Sheshonk,’ Max observed.

‘Well, there’s nothing wrong with your memory.’

Max wanted to tell Keate what he knew. That Pallesson, one of his recommendations, had executed Corbett in cold blood. But he knew that would be crossing the line.

‘What do you mean by “compromised”, Keate?’ Max persisted.

Keate removed his glasses and rubbed his eyes, not for one moment diverting his gaze from the dark-brown polished table. ‘He drugged me. He came round to see me one evening about some essay. I remember feeling very strange drinking my sherry as I went through it with him. I remember feeling dizzy. Then nothing. When I woke, I was on the floor …’ Keate’s voice tapered off. ‘I’m not gay, Max. Never have been. In fact, I’ve never been interested in sex at all. That’s the way I am. But that little bastard threatened to disgrace and humiliate me. Ruin my life. Yes, to answer your question, I pulled strings to get him into St John’s. Then when he graduated I had Tryon pull strings to get him hired by the Office. It’s as if he had the whole thing mapped out from the very beginning.’

Max was stunned into momentary silence. He was horrified. Horrified that it had happened, and horrified that he had dragged it out of Keate in such an inconsiderate manner.

‘Keate, it isn’t your fault.’ Max hated himself. He realized that he’d stumbled on something much worse than he ever could have guessed.

‘Yes, it is. I didn’t stand up to him. You did. He didn’t screw you over. You threw it all away rather than be under his thumb for evermore. But I didn’t. I couldn’t.’ Anger was now boiling inside the usually unflappable tutor.

‘There’s something else I need to know, Keate,’ Max said quietly. ‘Could he have compromised Tryon?’

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